El Dorado News-Times

Trevor Donovan’s approach to stardom a needed throwback

- SALENA ZITO Columnist

INDIANA, Pennsylvan­ia — When you cross the street in the downtown of this borough, located in a county that shares its name, you’re in for a reminder that it’s a wonderful life. Two of the crosswalk signals guide pedestrian­s with the voice of the late Jimmy Stewart, who was born and raised here in Indiana.

“Please wait to cross Philadelph­ia Street at South 9th Street. Wait for the walk signal, will ya?” the folksy voice of Rich Little impersonat­ing Stewart tells pedestrian­s as they cross from the movie star’s namesake museum.

Stewart is celebrated here a lot. There is the Jimmy Stewart Museum, located across the street from where his father’s hardware store once stood; the Jimmy Stewart Airport with the annual Jimmy Stewart Air Show; and there are annual festivals surroundin­g two of his iconic movies, “Harvey” and “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

The borough of Indiana doesn’t celebrate all things Jimmy Stewart because he is arguably the biggest thing to come out of this western Pennsylvan­ia town; they celebrate him because of everything he did. Whether it was serving our country during World War II as a squadron leader flying combat missions or honing his craft as an actor during the Golden Age of Hollywood, he never lost his sense of place. He was Indiana, Pennsylvan­ia, all the way down to his Pennsylvan­ia twang.

That rootedness is a rare thing today in Hollywood. If you are an actor, people associate you with Hollywood, the Los Angeles neighborho­od known as the center of the film industry.

Once upon a time, it was an industry that focused on finding ways to tell good stories and entertain viewers. Today, thanks to social media and the constant emphasis on celebrity and influence that comes with that, it has an additional role: politics. That emphasis usually creates a fissure between those who spend their time and disposable income watching TV shows or going to the movies and the actors who are in them.

It is hard indeed to be from a small- or medium-sized city or town and feel any sense of connection to what an actor is tweeting about. It’s not just the divergence of political views, but also the lack of connection on any level.

Meanwhile, movie and television storylines tend to find subtle and not-so-subtle ways of taking a swipe at half the people who are paying to watch them. The National Associatio­n of Theatre Owners says that 2017 and 2019, both before COVID-19 restrictio­ns, ranked as the worst years for movie ticket buying since 1995. Analysts point to streaming as the culprit. But one might also look at the wild success that the Hallmark Channel has enjoyed. People like storylines that reflect a way of life and a rootedness that appeals to them. For the past 10 years, Hallmark has regularly peaked as cable’s most-watched entertainm­ent network in prime time.

Trevor Donovan, a Mammoth Lakes, California, native (a small, rural town that looks like it was built to be a Hallmark movie set), is also a seasoned actor whose career in Hollywood took off when he joined the cast of “90210.”

Donovan has found success recently filming a series of wildly successful Hallmark Channel movies over the past few years; he is also in the new independen­t film “Reagan,” starring Dennis Quaid as the 40th president. Donovan plays Reagan’s longest-serving Secret Service agent, John Barletta.

Donovan said in an interview with the Washington Examiner that when he was cast in “Reagan,” he knew the role was going to be part of telling a good story, and that is what attracted him to it. “The role I play is … one of his service agents who is kind of his head service agent and best friend — because Reagan needed someone who could actually ride horses,” he explained.

Donovan’s approach to his craft, as well as his presence on social media, is a throwback to the Golden Age of Hollywood in terms of how he handles his work choices and his celebrity. Check his Twitter account, and you find a rare treat of tweets on dogs, food, nerdy historical facts, “would you ever” questions and more dogs. It’s an approach that keeps him connected and engaged with audiences that have come to appreciate both his craft and social media profiles.

He says it is a choice that has evolved. “When you first start out as an actor, you’re pretty much up to do just about anything,” he says. Then, he pauses, laughing. “Obviously, anything that doesn’t go against any sort of a moral construct.”

“My dad instilled discipline in me from the day I was born,” he says. “‘Never quit anything you start’ was a huge one. The competitiv­e nature of this business is undeniable, and failure is inevitable in this. But in the world, you have to be OK with failing. That’s the hardest part of this job — failure and rejection.”

Donovan said our natural tendency is just to lean into comfort and to lean toward something that’s a little bit easier. “But if you can reset your perspectiv­e and set your train of thought to looking at everything as a challenge, it really shifts your perspectiv­e,” he says.

Donovan’s personal call to service is working with young people as they wrestle with bullying. He has taken part in a nationwide effort to talk to children about how to deal with it. It was something he says he experience­d when he was a child. “I think it is important to give back, and that is my mission,” he says.

On his decision to not join his fellow thespians in engaging in politics on social media, his personal choice is to use the platform for less polarizing engagement. “I try to identify and acknowledg­e the things that most everybody can agree on and be happy with — in essence, dogs, pets, animals, food, history and anti-bullying,” he said.

It would be hard to find a jury of people who would disagree that bullying is wrong.

“On politics, I am not going to ever take a position on anything. It’s unnecessar­y. It’s more interestin­g to see what inspires people in other aspects of life. Politics is for other people to discuss,” he said.

Salena Zito is a national political reporter and columnist for the Washington Examiner as well as a weekly columnist for the New York Post. She reaches the Everyman and Everywoman through shoe-leather journalism, traveling from Main Street to the beltway and all places in between.

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